News – Separator Shrinkage

Separator Shrinkage: The Silent 20% Error
01 October 2025
In unconventionals, everybody loves to talk about EURs, decline curves, RTA/PTA, yada yada. But there’s a quiet math problem screwing up forecasts (and royalty checks) every single day: separator oil shrinkage.

Here’s the setup:

· Wells in shale basins usually measure oil and gas at separator conditions.

· Those volumes are then (incorrectly) treated as stock-tank volumes.

· Result? Forecasts and allocations look rosier than reality—sometimes by more than 20%.

What the heck is “shrinkage”?

When separator oil is stabilized to stock-tank conditions (1 atm, 60°F), it shrinks. The light ends flash off as gas.
  • Shrinkage Factor (SF): fraction of separator oil that makes it to the stock tank. Typical range? 0.65–0.99.
  • Flash Factor (FF): the gas liberated when that shrinkage happens. Could be 5–1000 scf/STB.
SF and FF aren’t constants—they swing with:
  • Separator pressure & temp (higher pressure = more shrinkage, lower temp = more shrinkage).
  • Wellstream composition (changes over time as BHP declines).
  • Shut-ins (hello “CGR kicks” and transient fluid changes).
In near-critical oils and gas condensates, shrinkage can swing like crazy (see image below)

Why it matters

Most operators slap on a single shrinkage factor for a well or even a whole basin. Problem:

  • That shortcut is wrong.
  • In volatile/near-critical fluids, it’s very wrong.
  • It skews oil vs. gas split, screws up allocation, and can make a well look 20% better than it is.

This isn’t just academic. Oil is worth more than gas. Overstating oil rates → bad decisions on capex, royalties, reserves.

A better way
The paper lays out a three-step fix:

  1. Build a field-wide EOS model (tuned to separator shrinkage data).
  2. Predict daily wellstream compositions (from well tests, GOR, API, etc.).
  3. Run those daily wellstreams through the actual surface process (#stages, separator p & T)

Boom: now you’ve got daily SF and FF. Not some “one-size-fits-all” fudge factor.
Don’t have an EOS model? Fine. Build a field-specific shrinkage correlation using test data. At minimum, use separator pressure, temperature, and liquid API.

Key takeaways

  1. Shrinkage changes a lot over time—especially in volatile and near-critical systems.
  2. Ignore it, and you can be off by >20% in stock-tank oil rates.
  3. If GOR is swinging, if separator conditions shift, or if you’ve got shut-ins? Update shrinkage daily.
  4. The lazy industry habit of applying one shrinkage factor for a whole basin? Outdated.

The bottom line: ignoring separator shrinkage is like not counting calories when you’re on a diet—it feels good in the short term, but you’re lying to yourself.
Want to know what your wells are really making? Stop trusting the separator. Start accounting for shrinkage.
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